Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 270, 29 September 1916 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, SEPT. 20. 1916

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Published Every Evenine Except Sunday, Dy Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Sts. R. G. Leeds. Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr.

Entered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, as Second Class Mall Matter.

growth of a blade of grass. The problem of life over which scientists have pondered for centuries and centuries is incarnate in the blade of grass growing in your yard. You need not look far for happiness. You can get it in your backyard if you care to look, study and ponder.

Shaping Our Happiness

Our lives are just about what we make out of

the material that comes to hand. If we make the

most of things, our lives will be full, rounded out,

happy and full of contentment. If we take a nar

row view of life, circumscribe our view by all

sorts of restrictive fences, we are bound to lead

a narrow, unhappy commonplace existence. You have often seen people who can derive all sorts of happiness out of the most simple little thing in creation. Give them a little trinket, a little souvenir, a little book, a cup of tea or a few cakes, and they will be happier than a king with a retinue of servants and all the pleasures money can buy. These people belong to that happy class that idealizes everything that comes its way. They bless everything and in return receive blessings so manifold that those of us who cannot understand their perpetual happiness wonder why they can be contented and full of sunshine all the time. We overlook the thousands of pretty and satisfying things in the world about us. If we would stop to consider a tree, a blade of grass, an insect, a piece of machinery, what wonderful and big thoughts would come to our mind. The whole problem of the universe is embodied in the

Helping the Hospital Annually the aid society of Reid Memorial Hospital makes an appeal to the citizens of Richmond to contribute for the purchase of supplies for the institution. Next Saturday, thousands of tags will be offered for sale at many stations in Richmond. Citizens will be asked to exchange a coin for a tag. Not the amount of money given for a tag, but the sentiment back of it, is what counts in this appeal. If thousands contribute a small amount for the tag, it will mean that thousands are interested in an institution that does much to alleviate human suffering and misery. Hitherto the city has responded liberally to the call of tag day. One is not expressing an idle

thought when the wish is expressed that the results of the past be exceeded when the.boxes are opened Saturday and the contents counted. The women who are giving their time and attention to the movement are not actuated by selfish or pecuniary motives. They are sacrificing of their time to aid the cause, and surely the coin that it paid for a tag is a small remuneration for what the women are giving. There are

few men in the city who do not value their time much higher than the amount of money they give

for a tag.

Tag day will be a success if every one helps,

and there is every indication that thousands will respond to the appeal.

PSYCHOLOGY TO AID

ALLEGED PATRICIDE

P I s '' v : $ V ' I ip " I

HEIRONIMUS GIVES CIVIC BODY LIFE

The West Richmond Improvement association gasped feebly and raised its head yesterday. Members pronounced the crisis past and announced today that it will live. When in danger of the ignominy of Inactivity through inability to interest representative West Richmond residents, the association prepared to expire quietly. Not a murmur was heard

for some time until N. C. Heironimus,

president last year, decided to try to

revive the lethargic body. Some announcements will be made next month, Mr. Heironimus said today after a conference with members last night. No meeting will be held in September. The regular meeting night formerly was the third Friday night in every month.

schools here by Mrs. Grace Gorman, of Richmond, musical instructor, has created a new enthusiasm and interest

in school activities. Rehearsals are held twice each week under the direction of Mrs. Gorman.

ORCHESTRA ORGANIZED.

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By Wm, J. Burns and Isabel Ostrander

A Real Detective Story by the World's Greatest Detective. A Fascinating Love Story Interwoven with the Tangled Threads of Mystery. Copyright, 1916, W. J. Watt Company. Newspaper rights by International News Service

"No man Is beyond my reach who has broken the law." The detective's voice was quietly controlled, yet each word pierced the silence like a swordthrust. "I have been threatened with ruin, with death, many times by criminals of all classes, from defaulting financiers to petty thieves, but I still live, and my fortunes have not been materially impaired. I do not court publicity, but I cannot shirk my duty because it entails that. And in this case my duty is plain. You, Bertrand Rockamore, came here, secretly, by

night, to try to persuade Mr. Lawton to go in with you on a crooked scheme to force him to, by blackmail, if necessary, on an old score. Failing in that, you killed him, to prevent the nefarious operations of yourself and your companions from being brought to light!" "You're mad, I tell you!" roared Rockamore. "Whoever stuffed you with such idiotic rot as that is making gammon of you! That conversation is a chimera of some disordered mind, if It isn't merely part of a deliberate conspiracy of yours against me! You'll Buffer for this, my man! I'll break you If It is the last act of my life!

Such a conference never took place,

and you know it!"

whose brain is overwrought. This midnight conference, which you 60 glibly quote, is a figment of her distraught mind or, if actually occurred (a fact of which you have no proof),

Miss Lawton admits, by the words she has uttered, that she did not see the mysterious visitor, but is attempting to identify me as that person merely

by the l?".C3 of my voice. She has

mndo no accusation against me until this mcmont, yet since her father's death she has heard my voice almost daily for several weeks. Come, Blaine, listen to reason! Your case has tumbled about your ears! You can only avoid serious trouble for both Miss Lawton and yourself by dropping this absurd matter here and now." "It is true that I did not recognize your voice before, but I have not until now heard it raised in anger as it was that night" began Anita, but Blaine silenced her with a gesture. "And the bottle of prussic acid which was found yesterday hidden in the chair v.here just now you searched for it?" ha demanded, sternly. "The incontrovertible evidence, proved late last night by an autopsy upon the body of Penninsrton Lawton. which shows

j that he came to his death by means of that poison how do you account for

'Come. Lawton, be sensible; half a

loaf is better than no bread."' Elaine! these facts, Rockamore." mintPri Rlnwlv. "'There is no hlack-1 "I do not propose to account

proceeded to his office,' where he spent a busy day, sending cables in cipher, detailing operatives to many new assignments and receiving reports. Late in the afternoon replies began

to come in to his cablegrams of the i

morning. Whatever their import, they quite evidently afforded him immense satisfaction, and as the early dusk settled down, his eyes began to glow with the light of battle, which those closest to him in his marvelous work had learned to recognize when victory was in sight. To Be Continued.

PROF. HUGO ttUttSTfaBJEras! The effect psychology may have on the testimony of witnesses In criminal cases which come to trial long after the acts alleged will be described in court here by Professor Hugo Munsterberg, of Harvard university, in the trial of Albert J. Roper, of Boston, charged with the murder of his father Albert Roper, of Tewksbury. William H. Wilson, of Lowell, senior counsel for the defence made this announcement In explanation of the daily presence In the courtroom of Prof. Munsterberg, who is director of the psychological laboratory at Harvard.

LECTURE SERIES OPENS

WHITEWATER, Ind., Sept. 29. With Genevieve Smith company as the attraction last night in the Christian church, the Whitewater lecture course began the series of five numbers, including two lectures and three entertainments. Announcement was made today that sufficient numbers of season tickets had been sold to Insure the financial success of the entertainments.

WHITEWATER, Ind., Sept 29. Organization of an orchestra in the

Extreme Weakness and Suffering Read How Mrs. Goodling got Relief and Strength.

Healthful

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is necessary for the enjoyment and prolongation of life. During sleep Nature renews the vital forces of the body and restores the energy. Sleeplessness is one of the evil results of indigestion. To avoid it, keep the stomach well, the liver active and the bowels regular. The health of these organs Is Assured by Beecham's Pills. A harmless vegetable remedy, which acts immediately on the stomach, liver, bowels and kidneys, toning and putting them in good working order. Millions of people sleep -well and keep well because, at the first unfavorable symptom, they begin to take

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With the Reel People

Masonic Calendar

Friday Sept. 29. King Solomon's chapter No. 4 R. A. M. Called meeting. Work in the Royal Arch degree, Refreshments.

AID INDUSTRIAL FUND.

for

mail about this it is an ordinary busi

ness proposition.'

" 'It's a damnable crooked scheme, and I shall have nothing to do with it. This is final! My hands are clean, and I can look every man in the face and tell him to go where you can go

now.'

"You remember that, dont you.

Rockamore?" Blaine interrupted him

self to ask sharply. "Do you also recall your reply? 'How about poor

Herbert Armstrong? His wife' "

"It's a He! A d d He!" cried Rock

amore. "I was not in this room that

night! Such a conversation never oc

curred! Who told you of this? Who dares accuse me?" "I do!" A clear, flute-like voice, resonant In Its firmness, rang out from behind him as he spoke, and he wheeled abruptly, to find Anita standing with her slender form outlined against the dark, rich velvet of the curtains. Her head was thrown back, her eyes blazing; and as she faced him, she s!owly raised her arm and pointed a steady finger at the recoiling figure. "I accuse you, Bertrand Rockamore. of the murder of my father! It was I who heard your conversation here in this room; it was I who found the vial which contained the poison you used when your arguments and threats failed! I am not mistaken I knew that I could never be mistaken if I

heard that voice again, shaken, as it was that night, with rage and defiance and fear! I knew that I should hear it again some time, and all these; weeks I have listened for it, until this moment. Mr. Blaine, this is the man!" : "Anita, you have lost your mind!" With the shock of the girl's appearance, a Rteely calm had come to the Englishman, and although a tremor ran through his tones, he held them

well In leash. "My poor child, you do not know what you are saying. "As for you," he turned and looked levelly into Blaine's eyes, "I am amazed that a man cf your perception and experience should for a moment entertain the idea that he could make out a case of capital crime against a person of my standing, solely upon the hysterical pseudo-testimony of a girl

them, whether they are facts or not,"

returned the other man, coolly. "Since I know nothing whatever about them, they are beyond my province. Unless you wish to bring ruin upon yourself, and unwelcome notoriety and possibly an official inquiry into her sanity upon Miss Lawton, you will not repeat this incredible accusation. Only my very real sympathy for her has enabled me to listen with what patience I have to the unparalleled insolence of this charge, but you are going too far. I see no necessity for further prolonging this interview, and with your permission I will withdraw unless, of course," he added, sneeringly, "you have a warrant for my arrest?" To Anita's astonishment, Henry Blaine stepped back with a slight

shrug and Rockamore, still witn mat sarcastic leer upon his lips, bowed low to her and strode from the room. You you let hm jgo, Mr. Blaine?" she gasped, incredulously. "You let him escape!" "He cannot escape." Blaine smiled a trifle grimly. "I'm giving him just a little more rope, that is all, to see if he will help us secure the others. His every move is under

strict surveillance for him tnere is

no way out, save one. "And that way?" asked Anita.

The detective made no reply. In a few minutes he took leave of her and

Members of the Odd Fellows Building association Wednesday night voted to make a contribution to industrial promotion fund. The sum was not fixed. The association completed regular business.

December is the wheat month in New South Wales.

harvest

In the Famous Players Film company's most recent release, "The Pretty Sister of Jose," Miss Marguerite Clark, the dainty and diminutive star who appears ecxlusively in productions of this company, meets one of her greatest opportunities, and attains a degree of power and charm that will do much to extend her phenomenally increasing popularity. This latest feature on the Paramount program is at the Murrette tonight.

Rust will disappear from steel if soaked in sweet oil for a day, followed with a rubbing with fresh lime.

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MUSIC TEACHER Mandolin Banjo Guitar Instruments repaired and refinished. ' Stuart M. Pratt 106 N. 6th St

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